The Government has decided to set up a special Cost Estimate Review Committee, in a bid to avoid cost overruns and discrepancies in Total Cost Estimates (TCE) and actual cost in infrastructure projects.
The Committee is expected to review TCE and contract cost variation variances of infrastructure development projects falling under Cabinet Appointed Procurement Committees (CAPCs) value threshold. The Committee is expected to curtail a recent trend observed, where cost overruns have been accommodated in projects, often without any upper ceilings.Â
Proposing to set up the Committee, Finance and Mass Media Minister Mangala Samaraweera informed Cabinet that a large number of contracts have been awarded over and above the engineersâ cost estimates, and instances of upward revision of cost occurred during the implementation state have become a frequent occurrence. A number of reasons, including lack of due consideration given to the initial project preparatory works, incomplete and inaccurate project design drawings and plans, resulting in unrealistic cost estimation, errors and omissions in the engineersâ cost estimates, faulty tender documents and discrepancies among documents, and lack of proper prefeasibility studies lead to cost over runs, the Minister explained. The Review Committee would consist of respective officers under the Ministry of National Policies and Economic Affairs, and they would review projects under the authority of the CAPCs.
The Cabinet of Ministers approved the Finance Ministerâs proposal to appoint Former Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation Secretary Nihal Somaweera as the Committee Chairman, and five other members to sit in the Committee.
The Committee will be tasked with carrying out the prior review of cost estimates, limiting margin for variations to 10% between the substantially responsive lowest evaluated bid price and the engineerâs estimate. Setting up the Committee will also limit the authority for handing contract cost variations by Heads of departments and Project Directors, who are currently responsible for the matter.
The Government has decided to award ilmenite tender to Rescom Mineral Trading FZE, based in the United Arab Emirates.
Earlier, State-owned Lanka Mineral Sands Ltd. called tenders to sell 25,000 metric tons of ilmenite, where the technical committee evaluated the rate offered by Rescom Mineral Trading FZE at $ 145.25 a ton to be the best price.
Accordingly, the proposal made by Industry and Commerce Minister Rishad Bathiudeen was approved by the Cabinet of Ministers, Cabinet Co-Spokesman Gayantha Karunathilaka said yesterday. The total value of the tender is set at $ 3.676 billion including royalty fees, he added.
Rescom is one of the largest mineral and metal conglomerates in the Middle East and Asia Pacific regions. It says its competency in the minerals business is in prospecting, mining, sourcing, processing, trading and delivering minerals and metals to the worldâºs leading oil-drilling, ceramic, glass, construction, energy and fertiliser industries. Headquartered in Dubai, UAE, the group has an industrial presence in India, Hong Kong, Kuwait, Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand.
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